Logo Goethe-Institut

Max Mueller Bhavan | India Chennai

|

7:00 PM

Philharmonic Fridays @ Goethe-Institut Chennai presents

The Digital Concert Hall of the Berliner Philharmoniker|The Youth Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine and the National Youth Orchestra of Germany

  • Goethe-Institut / Max Mueller Bhavan Auditorium, Chennai

  • Price Free entry. All are welcome!

Das Digital Concert Hall der Berliner Philharmoniker @ GI Chennai Foto: Peter Adamik

Peace will conquer war!

Goethe-Institut invites the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra to its auditorium in a digital format with high definition video live-screening for the connoisseurs of Western classical music of Chennai. The Digital Concert Hall with excellent sound and video is the best close-to-real experience one can get.
.
They are young and passionate about music: the Youth Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine and the German National Youth Orchestra are made up of the best young musicians from their countries. In May 2022, they wanted to perform together in Odesa. But the war ruined this plan. Here the young musicians are performing together at the Philharmonie Berlin, with a programme that includes works by Beethoven and Dvořák, plus the Symphonic Ballad Grazhyna by the Ukrainian composer Borys Lyatoshynsky.

Youth Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine
Artem Lonhinov
National Youth Orchestra of Germany

Programme

Ludwig van Beethoven - 6 min.
The Creatures of Prometheus, op. 43: Overture

Borys Lyatoshynsky - 21 min.
Grazhyna, Symphonic Ballad, op. 58

Antonín Dvořák - 39 min.
Symphony No. 8 in G major, op. 88

Rihards Dubra - 10 min.
Vater unser

Borys Lyatoshynsky was the most important Ukrainian symphonist of the 20th century. Until his death in 1968, he taught at the conservatories in Kiev and Moscow, and his students included Valentin Silvestrov and Yevhen Stankovych. When Joseph Stalin’s most powerful cultural functionary, Andrei Zhdanov, took up arms against ‘anti-national’ and ‘formalist’ tendencies in Soviet music, Lyatoshynsky came under massive pressure – not least because of his Third Symphony. In outspoken opposition to the aggressive policy of the Stalinist regime, he gave it the title ‘Peace will conquer war’.

His Symphonic Ballad Grazhyna, based on Adam Mickiewicz’s poem of the same name, was written in 1955 and spectacularly depicts the heroine’s heroic struggle against the attacking knights of the Teutonic Order. Together with the National Youth Orchestra of Germany, the Youth Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine dedicates itself here to this brilliantly orchestrated tone poem, which was acclaimed at its double premiere on 11th November 1955 in the Kiev Philharmonic and the Tchaikovsky Concert Hall in Moscow. The Ukrainian newcomer Artem Lonhinov, who studied violin and was a member of the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie, conducts.

The concert’s dramatic opening work is Beethoven’s overture to the ballet The Creatures of Prometheus. After the interval, we will hear Antonín Dvořák’s Eighth Symphony, whose wealth of ideas delighted Leoš Janáček: ‘No sooner have you met one character than the second one beckons to you in a friendly manner’.

All are Welcome!

Entry on first come first served basis
Mask is recommended throughout the event
Kindly cooperate to ensure everyone's safety